Want this question answered?
Oberon
He juiced her eyes with a drug called love-in-idleness, which would make her fall in love with the next thing she saw.
He wants to distract her with the juice of Love-in-Idleness, and while she is in love with something ugly, Oberon will make off with the Indian boy he wants.
Oberon actually sent Puck ( aka Robin Goodfellow) to find a flower that could make anything or anyone fall in love with anything else. The rumour that Puck left his home beacuse Oberon was forcing him to marry Moth and Puck didn't want to is all a pack of lies.
To start with the last question first, they have come for the wedding. During the argument, Titania says "Why art thou here but that, forsooth, the bouncing Amazon, your buskin'd mistress and your warrior love to Theseus must be wedded." Oberon replies, "How canst thou thus for shame Titania glance at my credit with Hippolyta, knowing I know thy love to Theseus." She says that this is not true; that his accusation is "the forgeries of jealousy." It does rather sound like Oberon thinks he has some "credit with Titania" but this might be Oberon's wishful thinking. At the wedding the fairies do not show themselves to bless the happy couple; they do it secretly. And this suggests that possibly these love-relationships are all happening in Titania and Oberon's minds, and they actually don't have any relationship with Theseus and Hippolyta.
Oberon
Oberon wants Titania to fall in love with something so that he can distract and manipulate her. He does this as a form of revenge for refusing to give him a changeling boy she has in her care. Oberon uses a love potion to make Titania fall in love with Bottom, a Weaver transformed into a donkey.
Oberon is going to pure the juice into Titania eyes while she is sleep. Then when she wakes up, the first thing she sees she will fall in love with. When she falls in love with Oberon he will make her give him the boy.
Oberon wants Titania to fall in love with some vile thing so she will have no afection for the boy stolen from the Indian King anymore. This way, he can take the boy as a servant and won't have Titania in the way. Later Oberon plans to cure the love spell from the Queen using a herb.
Titania and Oberon are two characters in Shakespeare's "A Midsummer Knight's Dream". Oberon asks Titania to take the child twice. The second time, Titania again refuses and leaves. Oberon vows revenge, creating a potion that will cause her to fall in love with the first thing she sees. This, of course, is used on the wrong person.
He juiced her eyes with a drug called love-in-idleness, which would make her fall in love with the next thing she saw.
In A Midsummer Night's Dream, Titania really loves her husband Oberon. Although they are having a spat at the start of the play, and Oberon causes her to have a temporary infatuation with the half-donkey Bottom, in the end she comes back to Oberon who is her true love.
Once Oberon put the the flower juice on Titania and she falls in love with Bottom, who has the head of an ass, he takes the boy. Titania is to busy with Bottom that she doesn't care or notice Oberon took the Indian boy.
He wants to distract her with the juice of Love-in-Idleness, and while she is in love with something ugly, Oberon will make off with the Indian boy he wants.
She could, except that Oberon snuck up on her when she was asleep and juiced her with the Love-in-Idleness. She was also asleep when he juiced her with the antidote. Although Oberon could make himself invisible to mortals like Demetrius and Helena, it probably didn't work on other fairies.
Yes, Titania is married to Oberon in William Shakespeare's play "A Midsummer Night's Dream". They are the Fairy Queen and King, respectively, and their relationship is filled with conflict and intrigue throughout the play.
Oberon pronounces a spell over Titania to make her fall in love with some sort of beast or animal,therefore embarrassing her. Oberon does this for revenge against Titania for not sleeping with him,keeping the changeling boy as well as for having an affair with Theseus. What thou seest when thou dost wake,Do it for thy true-love take,Love and languish for his sake:Be it ounce, or cat, or bear,Pard, or boar with bristled hair,In thy eye that shall appearWhen thou wakest, it is thy dear:Wake when some vile thing is near